1 / 17

Integrated Marketplace Regulation Walk-Thru

Integrated Marketplace Regulation Walk-Thru. Originated on December 16 th , 2011 Modified on October 15 th , 2013. Objectives. Provide insights on how regulation is committed in the Planning and Day Ahead Integrated Marketplace processes

Télécharger la présentation

Integrated Marketplace Regulation Walk-Thru

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Integrated MarketplaceRegulation Walk-Thru Originated on December 16th, 2011 Modified on October 15th, 2013

  2. Objectives • Provide insights on how regulation is committed in the Planning and Day Ahead Integrated Marketplace processes • Present a typical course of action for deploying regulation in real time

  3. Multi Day RUC / Day Before Day Ahead Given projected topology and Load, SPP calculates the total required Regulation in both Up and Down directions for the market footprint If necessary, long lead-time Resources are committed to meet the forecasted demand based on reliability and economic and contingency reserve requirement

  4. Day Ahead Market • Regulation is cleared for next operating day hourly. • Units committed in Multi-Day Risk Assessment are considered first “must run” in the DA Market execution and may be cleared for regulation hourly. • Hourly Market Clearing Prices for Reg-Up and Reg-Down are part of the Day Ahead Market Results.

  5. RUC RUC minimizes the cost of commitment to meet forecasted capacity requirements SCUC executes to ensure sufficient capacity has been committed to meet the forecasted load and OR requirement, this includes ensuring committed resources are able to provide regulation to meet requirement. The commitments are reflected in COP (Current Operating Plan) accordingly.

  6. Hourly Regulation Selection • 20 minutes prior to the top of every hour SPP selects a pool of resources deemed needed for regulation for next hour. • All regulation qualified resources receive a Regulation or NotRegulating Status for the next hour. • More resources may be selected by the operator for regulation during the operating hour as needed.

  7. RTBM / RTGEN RTBM clears regulation in the up and down directions independently using COP data, Regulation Selection and RTGEN’s ICCP Control Status. RTBM calculates a cleared regulation MW for each resource and assigns it a priority, which is used as a merit for distribution of regulation. The methodology for assigning priorities to each resource is covered in the Marketplace Protocols. The purpose for the priority is to avoid dispatching too many units for regulation. Example: 50MW regulation required deployed on 50 different cleared resources (1MW per resource) is not acceptable SPP receives RTGEN Control Status on each resource via ICCP.

  8. RTGEN / RTBM • Each resource that is cleared for regulation will be assigned a priority level by RTBM. • The idea is that we will have different sets of generators with different priorities. (i.e X gens will have priority 1, Y gens will have priority 2 ……). • The deployment will be done from priority 1, and if priority 1 set resources do not meet the regulation amount needed, then priority 2 is assigned the obligation and so on. • This will allow for the distribution of regulation amongst several but limited number of resources to avoid the small MW distribution on each resource. Priority assignments may also be configured to create geographical diversity in each priority. Note: Current SPP Market Protocols states that only one priority is activated. All regulation cleared resource will have a priority group of 1

  9. RTBM / RTGEN • Next RTBM run will capture the MW output on all resources via RTGEN including the regulation components. RTBM may adjust the resources’ output for least cost solution.

  10. RTBM / RTGEN • A participating resource must have the following attributes. • Registration Regulation Qualified Flag = 1 • Dispatch Status = Regulating • RTGEN Control Status = 2 • The regulation priority is greater than zero • Good Quality MW Telemetry

  11. RTBM / RTGEN • The following are the valid Control Statuses: • 0 – Unit is offline • 1 – Online, following dispatch targets and, optionally, contingency reserve • 2 – Online, following dispatch targets and, optionally, contingency reserve and/or regulation deployments • 3 – Online and off control (i.e. fixed generation such as pumping units, test or resource issues) • If any resource is capable of regulating, its RTGEN Control Status shall be set to 2 regardless if they were cleared for regulation. The Additional information slide provides the reasoning behind this requirement.

  12. RTBM / RTGEN • Every 2 – 4 seconds RTGEN performs an ACE calculation using the standard calculation formula. • SPP will also be receiving a Telemetered Control Status of all units to determine the current capabilities of those units (i.e. load following, regulating etc.) • Based on the calculated ACE, AGC may or may not deploy regulation. An option for offsetting the ACE is available if the operator projects a significant rapid change in load, generation or interchange. • RTGEN will determine the set of resources to deploy when regulation is required.

  13. RTGEN Deployment • If a resource is dispatched for regulation, the MP will see the total dispatch point adjusted via ICCP which is composed RTBM Energy Setpoint and RTBM Regulation Setpoint assuming the resource is deployed for only regulation and energy. • Dispatch Point sent = Energy Setpoint + Regulation Setpoint + Reserve Setpoint

  14. Additional information Reason For setting Control Mode to what you are capable of, not what you are currently doing

  15. Additional information Reason For setting Control Mode to what you are capable of, not what you are currently doing • During transitioning from one hour to the next, there is a potential for unintended discrepancy between the RTBM Control Status and the RTGEN ICCP Control Status • Due to the fact that there is no look ahead for RTGEN Control Status and, RTBM Regulation Deployment will use the comparison of these statuses, which are meant for different timeframes. RTGEN is for current time and RTBM is for future intervals, in this case the top of the hour. • RTBM will in turn determine a Regulation Deployment Status that may be against the intent of the Market Participant With RTGEN Control Status set to 1 for one hour and 2 during the next

  16. Additional information Reason For setting Control Mode to what you are capable of, not what you are currently doing • If RTGEN ICCP Control Status is kept at 2, as long as the unit is capable of providing regulation, RTBM will effectively rely on the Control Status to determine the Deployment Status. • This resolves the issue described previously of transitioning from one hour to the next. With RTGEN Control Status set to 2 during all intervals

More Related